Influence of molecular structure of the tolerogenicity of bacterial dextrans. III. Dissociation between tolerance and immunity to the alpha1--6- and alpha1--3-linked epitopes of dextran B1355.

1975 
Dextran B1355 induces a direct PFC response detectable with dextran B512-sensitized red cells which is directed towards an alpha1--6-linked glucose epitope. This response is distinguishable from the alpha1--3-linked specificity assayed by homologous sensitization in that: (a) it is totally suppressed in donors previously rendered tolerant of B512; (b) the PFC are sensitive to inhibition by B512 and isomaltohexaose. The alpha1--6 epitope of B1355 is less immunogenic in BALB/c mice than that with alpha1--3 linkage, inducing a lower amplitude of response and requiring a 100-fold greater minimal dose, while conversely, it is the more effective tolerogen. No alpha1--6-specific response develops in 50 per cent of mice given 10 mg of B1355 and all become totally unresponsive within 14 days. This tolerant state remains stable when spleen cells are transferred to irradiated recipients. By comparison, parallel depression of the alpha1--3 response is not great and rapidly lost by similar transfer. No correlation was observed between the levels of alpha1--6 suppression and alpha1--3 response induced by 10 mg of B1355 in individual mice. The dissociative aspects of the responses to these two epitopes present on the same molecule are discussed in relation to some current theories of B-cell tolerance induction. It is argued that the present findings are contrary to those models which attribute a causal role to mitogenic overstimulation or failure to generate an extrinsic 'second signal'.
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